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Closing the Achievement Gap from an International Perspective: Transforming STEM for Effective Education PDF

330 Pages·2014·3.808 MB·English
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Closing the Achievement Gap from an International Perspective Julia V. Clark Editor Closing the Achievement Gap from an International Perspective Transforming STEM for Effective Education 1 3 Editor Julia V. Clark Chevy Chase Maryland USA ISBN 978-94-007-4356-4 ISBN 978-94-007-4357-1 (eBook) DOI 10.1007/978-94-007-4357-1 Springer Dordrecht Heidelberg London New York Library of Congress Control Number: 2013951533 © Springer Science+Business Media B.V. 2014 No part of this work may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, microfilming, recording or otherwise, without written permission from the Publisher, with the exception of any material supplied specifically for the purpose of being entered and executed on a computer system, for exclusive use by the purchaser of the work. Printed on acid-free paper Springer is part of Springer Science+Business Media (www.springer.com) To the memory of my mother and father, Bessie M. Clark and Frank Clark, who taught me the value of a strong educational background and who by example taught me the power of principle; to my sister, Mary C. Lewis (retired school teacher) and nephew Kelvin C. Lewis for their encouragement and support throughout my professional career; and to all teachers who believe that all children are capable of learning and succeeding in school. v Preface In the very interesting essays that are collected here, one learns that the gap in aca- demic achievement that has caused so much consternation among educators in the United States is not unique to North America. From these descriptions of exemplary efforts at making more efficient the teaching and learning of science, technology, engineering and mathematics we see, let alone what can and should be done peda- gogically, we are reminded that the underproductivity of teaching and learning with some populations of students is an international problem that is bigger than educa- tion alone can solve. In his brilliantly conceived book, Paths Toward a Clearing, Professor Michael Jackson problematizes the task of the anthropologists who seek to discern meaning from their observations of the lived experience of the other. Jackson interrogates the insufficiently addressed issue, “with what degree of certainty can I interpret the meaning to the other person of the experiences she, herself, has lived.” The late distinguished anthropologist, Ogbu (1978), avoided this problem in much of his work by focusing not on interpreting meaning to the other, but on the correlates and apparent consequences of the life lived by the other. In Ogbu’s insight- ful studies of the lives of people in different parts of the world who experienced low caste and caste-like status, he concluded that the status of the experiencing person influenced the degree to which that person became socialized to the standards and values of the hegemonic culture. Low-status, marginalized and underresourced peo- ple all over the world tend to fair poorly in the educational institutions to which they are exposed. To the extent that the inferior status is perceived as immutable, as in low-caste or low-caste-like status, this association between status and achievement tends to be even more prominent. Thus, when one’s assigned status is identifiable by physiognomic characteristics, such as skin color (even in the absence of caste), the identification as low-class functions as caste. Thus, Ogbu describes Blacks in the United States as a caste-like group, and he describes academic achievement and life-outcome characteristics as consistent with the expectations associated with that caste-like status. Ogbu goes on to report similar relationships in caste or caste-like groups in Australia, India, Japan and the United States. In the collection of essays assembled here at The Achievement Gap in Inter- national Perspective, we see Ogbu’s perspective reflected again. Concern with vii viii Preface the achievement gap may have first come to recent public notice in the United States in the contexts of Black/White comparisons of academic achievement. Clark (1954), Coleman (1966), Miller (1995), and National Task Force on Minority High Achievement (1999). However, the essayists included in this collection remind us that disparities in academic achievement are worldwide phenomena begging for a solution. Guidance toward a possible solution may be found in an interrogation of Jackson’s and Ogbu’s perspectives on this issue. Much of the work underway on this problem in the United States and around the world is directed at helping underdeveloped persons to achieve what I have written about and labeled as intellective competence. I have defined such competence as the universal currency of technologically developed societies. I generally refer to such attributes as the capacity to access and utilize information that is grounded in such disciplines as the humanities, mathematics and the sciences. The use of such information is reflected in the capacity to create and manage engineering and tech- nology projects. In addition, I refer to the intentional command and control of one’s affective, cognitive and situative mental capacities as essential in intellective com- petence. This is the complex of human competencies that we recognize to be the by-products of one’s having studied and mastered the so called STEM disciplines. But these indicators of intellective competence are largely identified with the cul- tures of the social orders that have also used these competencies to subordinate their low-class or low-caste members. To close the achievement gap, these subordinated populations must embrace the standards, skills and values of the very people who have used these factors in the service of their own advancement and the suppression of the low-status members. Following Jackson, we cannot be certain that we are accurately interpreting the meaning of the lived experiences associated with ones having been forced to learn the ways of the dominating other. But Ogbu's work with Black boys in Compton, California suggests that the low-status persons are very much aware of the absence of a sense of polity for themselves. As a result, according to Ogbu, they constrain their investment of effort in the mastery of the hegemonic cultural forms, informa- tion, techniques and values. Should this way of conceptualizing the problem prove to be correct, our domestic and international efforts at improving our strategies for improving the teaching and learning of STEM and other essential academic subjects may be limited until we also find a way to bring a greater sense of polity into the lives of low-class and low-caste members of the societies of the world. In the collection of essays that follow, we see examples of exceptional pedagogi- cal efforts directed at the more effective teaching and learning of STEM subjects, but our elevation of this work makes the task seem too easy. Solid curriculum, good and creative teaching, and engaged learners are important, but they may not provide an adequate solution to a problem that involves more than schooling. Even with excellent teaching and well-resourced schools, it may be necessary for attention to be given to the personal attributions that are assigned to the lived experiences of the persons who must do the learning. Jackson reminds us that such interpreta- tions are one of the challenges to the anthropologist. I claim that understanding the lived experience of the learner, and appropriately adapting our teaching to it, Preface ix is one of the continuing challenges to those of us who teach. Yet we know that the personal attributions assigned to the actual experiences of one’s life are only a part of the dynamic. Those actual lived experiences do influence the attributions that are assigned by the persons living the experience. Thus pedagogical efforts at closing the achievement gap in the United States and in other countries around the world must be viewed as more than problems of the goodness of the teaching and learn- ing of STEM and other subject matter. To close the academic achievement gap in societies where people live lives of inegalitarian conditions and statuses, education may need to be thought of more comprehensively and thought of as inclusive of both the conditions of life for the learners and the meanings that they assign to their conditions of life. Education may have to begin with serious attention being given to the improvement of the quality of life for the learners. Obviously, education is not synonymous with schooling. These essays remind us that this admonition is true worldwide. Edmund W. Gordon is the John M. Musser Professor of Psychology, Emeritus at Yale University and the Richard March Hoe Professor of Psychology and Educa- tion, Emeritus at Teachers College, Columbia University References Clark, K. B. (1954). Segregated Schools in New York City. Paper presented at the Child Apart, Northside Center for Child Development, New Lincoln School NY. Coleman, J. S., Campbell, E. Q. Hobson, C. J., McPartland, J., Mood, A. M., Weinfeld, F. D., et al. (1966). Equality of educational opportunity. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office. Jackson, M. (1989). Paths toward a clearing: Radical empiricism and ethnographic inquiry. Bloo- mington: Indiana University Press. Miller, L. S. (1995). An American imperative: Accelerating minority educational advancement New Haven: Yale University Press. National Task Force on Minority High Achievement. (1999). Reaching the top: A Report of the National Task Force on Minority High Achievement. New York: College Board. Ogbu, J. (1978). Minority education and caste: The American system in cross-cultural perspective. New York: Academic Press. Acknowledgements I have often felt that much of my current and future anticipated success can be attrib- uted to a broad educational foundation, a plethora of professional and community experiences, networking opportunities, and a commitment to teaching and learning. Many people have contributed very extensively to my learning over the years. With- out family, writing would be intolerable. First and foremost, I express my heartfelt thanks to my beloved deceased parents for always giving me their blessings. They have been my inspiration and motivation for continuing to improve my knowledge and move my career forward. They have been my rock, and I dedicate this book to them. For individual and collective contribution to this effort, encouragement, and moral support, I wish to acknowledge with special thanks my sister, Mary C. Lewis (a retired teacher), and my nephew Kelvin C. Lewis. I wish to thank several colleagues, teachers and friends for directly or indirectly influencing my thinking on the writing of this book and for their encouragement and interest in my professional growth, especially Drs. Willie Pearson, Marvin Druger, and Madelyn “Faye” Neathery. Unreserved thanks to Faye for her many years of friendship and for her valuable advice and support. Special thanks to Professor Edmund W. Gordon, my mentor and friend, whose scholarly work and interest in the quality education of all children inspired and mo- tivated me to excel to my fullest potential. His professional input in the writing of this book is appreciated immensely. I also dedicate this book to the teachers, administrators, and policy-makers com- mitted to the improvement of education. I thank them for their willingness to chal- lenge mainstream viewpoints. These people are involved in changing systems to ensure universal education in the future. My thanks to Drs. Gavin W. Fulmer, Joseph Krajcik, and Lorenzo Taylor for assisting me in selecting some of the contributors to this book. In the end, I believe that this team of authors has provided the perfect blend of knowledge and skills that went into this book. Thanks to Leonard S. Rosenbaum for his superb editing of the book. He not only noticed the mistakes but also suggested those additions that can seem obvious in hindsight but that would never occur to you. xi xii Acknowledgements I express my sincere gratitude to my colleagues affiliated with the National As- sociation for Research in Science Teaching (NARST), American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), Sigma Xi: The Scientific Research Society, and the Kellogg National Fellowship Program (KNFP) for their inspiration and encour- agement in carrying out this project. Most importantly, I would like to thank the authors of this book for devoting their time and effort. They have helped to bring a new dimension to our knowl- edge of what is happening on an international scale. Many thanks to Drs. Edmund W. Gordon, Linda Darling Hammond, Motoko Akiba, Guodong Lang, Larry D. Yore, Leslie Francis Pelton, Brian W. Neill, Tim W. Pelton, John Anderson, Todd M. Milford, Armando Sanchez Martinez, Marcos A. Rangel, Ricardo A. Madeiria, Geoff Whitney, Jake Anders, Mustafa Sami Topcu, Gaoming Zhang, Yong Zhao, Sonya N. Martin, Seung-Um Choe, Chan-Jong Kim, Youngsun Kwak, Jason TAN, Nick Taylor, Johan Muller, and Debra Panizzon. Working with all of you made this a magnificent experience. The support received from all of you was vital to the suc- cess of the project. I appreciate that you believed in me to provide the leadership and knowledge to make this book a reality. You have helped bring a new dimension to our knowledge of what is happening on an international scale. As researchers, you were interested in addressing achievement gap issues as they related to school effectiveness from an international perspective involving academies, practitioners and policy makers that play major roles in reform efforts in different parts of the world. Your chapters will influence global changes in the world. Through this book and my travel, I will continue to spread your message of support to others wishing to improve the teaching and learning of all students. Julia V. Clark

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